AUS Tertiary Update Vol.4 No.16
In our lead story this
week…..
AUS PRO-PUBIC SECTOR, NOT ANTI-PTES
AUS
National President, Neville Blampied, has made it clear that
in its fight for a fairer outcome for universities in this
week's Budget, the association has not been calling for
tuition subsidies to Private Training Establishments (PTEs)
to cease. Mr Blampied says AUS simply wants the capital
component of the funding – which represents around 12% of
the total the PTEs receive for each equivalent full-time
student – to be directed to the public sector. That would
mean an extra $20m available to the public tertiary sector
in 2002. He says it is unfair to the public tertiary sector
– which accounts for most of the student population – that
PTEs receive the same amount of capital funding as they do.
"It is simply perverse that the government should allow the
quality of the education available in the public tertiary
sector to decline steeply, while cosseting the private
sector." The message from the Minister in charge of
Tertiary Education, Steve Maharey, in December 1999 was that
he would review the system that saw PTEs and public
institutions receive the same tuition subsidies and “put
something else in place in 2001”. Instead, he says, Mr
Maharey was telling a conference of the New Zealand
Association of Private Education Providers in September 2000
that "…upon taking office, this Government proceeded with
moves to equate PTE funding rates with those in the public
sector." Labour's election manifesto for 1999 said the
Government was going to "establish an agreement with
tertiary institutions on fees stabilisation. The lack of
such agreement has resulted in the litany of problems that
we have highlighted week by week in "Tertiary Update". We
are in no doubt that the number of university staff seeking
greener (read better funded) pastures overseas will go on
rising and recruiting problems will get worse.
And a
note to watch out for our special Budget edition of
"Tertiary Update" on Friday.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week:
1. AUS endorses Canterbury protest
2. Staff
effort means huge savings
3. Students' stance under
criticism
4. Otago Polytech job losses
5. Fewer
students as population ages
6. He's resigned!
7. U21
ready to roll
AUS ENDORSES CANTERBURY PROTEST
The
Canterbury Branch of AUS is endorsing a call by the
Vice-Chancellor of Canterbury University to close down for
half a day tomorrow (25 May) in protest at Government's
funding offer in return for universities freezing fees to
students again next year. Canterbury AUS Branch President,
Maureen Montgomery says the Government seems "determined to
allow the situation to deteriorate yet further and to defer
any measure of financial redress until 2003" and is
encouraging members to attend a rally being held outside the
main Library at 1pm. In a message to staff proposing the
protest, Professor Daryl Le Grew says he is taking the
"unprecedented" action of closing the university because of
the "precarious" situation the university is in as it faces
the choice of either a deficit or further cutbacks. "The
closure symbolises the impact of underfunding on the
University community and stresses that there is a threshold
below which we cannot work. We are at that threshold," he
says.
Meanwhile, National's Education spokesperson, the
MP for Ilam, Gerry Brownlee is predicting that the
Canterbury action will be the first of many from tertiary
institutions "spitting the dummy and saying they won't put
up with the unsustainable financial position next year".
STAFF EFFORT MEANS HUGE SAVINGS
If university staff
around the country felt that they'd been doing the work of
at least 10 people in the recent past, an article in the
current issue of New Zealand Education Review suggests they
might have underestimated their contribution. The article,
by AUS National President Neville Blampied, reveals that
over the 1990s New Zealand universities lost 590 academic
staff – enough to fill all the positions at Waikato or
Canterbury. As a result the university system saved itself
more than $200m during that period and students paid at
least $66m less in fees. The remaining staff put in an extra
3000 person-years, or more than 7.5m. hours in additional
work but, as Mr Blampied points out, there was no extra
reward for that giant leap in productivity, and salaries
didn't even match inflation.
STUDENTS' STANCE UNDER
CRITICISM
The Waikato Times newspaper has taken students
to task for criticising the universities and polytechnics
for saying they will refuse the Government's fee freeze
deal. The students are, the paper says, gunning for the
closest target but not necessarily the right one. It advises
them to instead back the universities and give the
Government the "hard word" that if it wants to reduce
student fees it needs to find a way that "doesn't involve
lumping the burden on to already stressed unis and techs".
And the Waikato Times supports AUS for backing the
institutions. "They know that a fee freeze without decent
compensation can only mean lower wages and a shoddier
system."
And in Palmerston North, the Evening Standard
discusses Massey Vice-Chancellor, James McWha's warning
about the threat the appointment of commissioners to
financially-troubled institutions would have on their
autonomy. While taking his point, the Standard says that a
university in financial crisis would compromise its
reputation and suggests that New Zealand may already be
doing this – by seeking to "more closely align what is
taught at university with what the market is demanding" in
an attempt to put "bums" on lecture theatre seats. What we
need, the Evening Standard says, is a nation-wide strategy
to tackle the root causes of universities' financial
problems.
OTAGO POLYTECH JOB LOSSES
The acting
Chief Executive of Otago Polytechnic has warned job losses
are inevitable this year as the institution continues its
restructuring. Two corporate management staff have so far
lost their positions, and Mr Herd said the review team was
working to shedding twenty positions altogether. In its
annual report, released this week, the polytechnic said it
had failed to reach its target of 3,400 full-time equivalent
students, with the final figure for last year 3,169. ASTE
notes that staff are about to be made redundant in
Engineering and it has been indicated that the Trades areas
are also under threat – another blow for the knowledge
society?.
WORLD WATCH
FEWER STUDENTS AS POPULATION
AGES
A leaked report prepared for a South Australian
government education agency says student numbers in the
state are likely to fall by 7000 over the next two decades
as the population gets older, and birth rates decline. The
report says the shrinking of the traditional 15 to
24-year-old student base could see South Australia leading
the nation in an "emerging educational viability crisis" and
that without a concerted strategy to deal with this fact,
the state's educational institutions could face a crisis of
declining enrolments that threatened their continued
viability. It reportedly recommends trying to attract
students from other parts of Australia, and from overseas to
counteract the falling student numbers in the state.
HE'S
RESIGNED!
Further to our story about from the past two
weeks – the managing editor of the British Medical Journal,
Richard Smith, has resigned from his part-time professor's
position at the University of Nottingham in protest at the
university's acceptance of a gift of $US5.5-m from British
American Tobacco.
U21 READY TO ROLL
The Universitas
21 consortium expects to have a deal with the publisher
Thomson Learning early next month, clearing way for the
global e-university to be operating by next year. The new
chair of U21, Graeme Davies of Glasgow University said more
than $US20m in equity had been committed, and he was
confident the $25m target would be reached. But that
optimism doesn't reflect the fact that staff and student
organisations continue to raise concerns over key aspects of
the venture, and the deal with Thomson Media.
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